| 
             
						Kinks musical, Miller 
						play are big winners at Oliviers 
			
   
            
			Send a link to a friend  
 
            
						
						[April 13, 2015] 
						By Michael Roddy 
			
						LONDON (Reuters) - "Sunny 
						Afternoon," based on the music of the 1960s rock group 
						the Kinks, blew away American competitors to win best 
						new musical at the Olivier Awards on Sunday, while a 
						revival of Arthur Miller's "A View from the Bridge" took 
						best play revival. 
             | 
        	
			
            | 
				 
				
				 Kevin Spacey won a Special Award, presented to him by Judi 
				Dench, at the London theater's premiere awards evening in 
				acknowledgement of his 10 years as artistic director of The Old 
				Vic, ending later this year. 
				 
				Spacey, now the face of television's "House of Cards," serenaded 
				the star-studded audience at the Royal Opera House gala with a 
				rendition of Simon & Garfunkel's "A Bridge Over Troubled Waters" 
				- perhaps in recognition of his rocky start at The Old Vic that 
				turned into an undisputed triumph. 
				 
				"Yes it was a long period of time, but my life changed as a 
				result of the people I had a chance to work with every single 
				day at that theater," Spacey said. 
				 
				A clearly ebullient Ray Davies, 70, the former lead singer of 
				the Kinks, said it was a great day for a British musical to beat 
				out the American challengers "Beautiful" and "Memphis." 
				 
				"It shows how important musical theater has become in this 
				country," Davies said, noting the show was the only British 
				musical nominated, and topped the evening with four gongs. 
				
				  
				Davies got an award for musical achievement while the show 
				picked up awards for best supporting actor in a musical for 
				George Maguire and best actor in a musical for John Dagliesh. 
				 
				Best actress in a musical went to Katie Brayben who stars in 
				"Beautiful - The Carole King Musical." 
				 
				Stage veteran Angela Lansbury, in a floor-length blue gown, 
				almost stole the show with a teary-eyed acceptance speech for 
				best supporting actress in a revival of Noel Coward's "Blithe 
				Spirit." 
			
			[to top of second column]  | 
            
             
            
			  
			"I can't remember a lot of things these days, but I can remember my 
			lines," Lansbury, 89, of "Murder, She Wrote" fame, said as she 
			clutched her Olivier statuette. 
			 
			Ivo van Hove, the Belgian director of the Miller revival, said the 
			play set in the Italian immigrant community in New York is perhaps 
			more relevant now than it was at its premiere a half century ago. 
			 
			"Arthur Miller is capable of dealing with the issues that still 
			matter for us at this moment," said Van Hove, who also won the award 
			for best director. 
			Mark Strong won best actor in a play for the same production for his 
			performance as the male lead Eddie Carbone. 
			 
			Penelope Wilton, best known to television viewers as Isobel Crawley 
			in "Downton Abbey," was named best actress in a play for "Taken at 
			Midnight." 
			 
			The best new play award went to "King Charles III," a look at a 
			Britain of the future in which Prince Charles - perennially 
			overshadowed by his mother Queen Elizabeth - finally accedes to the 
			throne. 
			 
			Playwright Mike Bartlett, who wrote the play in blank verse, joked 
			in accepting the award that he wanted to express "thanks to the 
			Royal Family for not closing us down for treason." 
			 
			(Editing by Michael Roddy and Andre Grenon) 
			[© 2015 Thomson Reuters. All rights 
				reserved.] Copyright 2015 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, 
			broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.  |